787790342458
787790342359

First Time Feeling

Leah Blevins

Regular
£8.99
Sale
Regular
£8.99
Unavailable
Unit Price
per 

Format: CD

Cat No: 42458CD

Release Date:  06 August 2021

Label:  Crabtree Records / Thirty Tigers

Packaging Type:  Slip Sleeve (CD or Vinyl)

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  787790342458

Genres:  Country  Americana  

Release Date:  06 August 2021

Label:  Crabtree Records / Thirty Tigers

Packaging Type:  Slip Sleeve (CD or Vinyl)

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  787790342359

Genres:  Country  Americana  

  • Description

    Imbued with the grit of vintage country music and the grace of gospel, Leah Blevins' debut album is a scrapbook of sorts, a collage of feelings and memories from a decade spent working in the big city of Nashville while missing the small town she left behind.

    "It's a timestamp of my twenties," says the Sandy Hook, Kentucky, native. "Here are all the stories and all the experiences from that decade. Here are all the mixed emotions I've felt about things I've gone through and people I've met along the way." First Time Feeling turns tribulations into what Blevins calls "bundles of triumphs," which lend weight to her well-observed lyrics and gravity to her soulful vocals. "It's about coming into womanhood, but it's more than just a coming-of-age story. It's me discovering that I'm capable of writing a song on my own. I'm capable of staying sober.

    I'm capable of all these things that once felt so far out of reach. Within those walls these songs had to be unapologetically honest."Or, as she puts it on the bluesy opener "Afraid," "Have you ever been afraid, with nowhere to hide? Scared of nothing, but you're running inside?" The growling guitars-played by friends and co-producers Paul Cauthen and Beau Bedford-sound like wolves at the door, as Blevins introduces the themes that drive this record: the reality that we're all afraid of something, that we're all running from it even though we'll never get away from it.

    She summons those fears in songs that are both plainspoken and artful, which is apt for someone who considers herself a poet first, a singer second. "Back when I was seven or eight, I was just fascinated with words. Writing was always an outlet for me. It always felt like a release and a relief, almost like going to church."Church and music were the family business, especially on her mother's side. Her grandparents, aunts, and uncles sang in a gospel group called the Harbor Masters, touring throughout Appalachia in the '70s and '80s.

    Description

    Imbued with the grit of vintage country music and the grace of gospel, Leah Blevins' debut album is a scrapbook of sorts, a collage of feelings and memories from a decade spent working in the big city of Nashville while missing the small town she left behind. "It's a timestamp of my twenties," says the Sandy Hook, Kentucky, native. "Here are all the stories and all the experiences from that decade. Here are all the mixed emotions I've felt about things I've gone through and people I've met along the way." First Time Feeling turns tribulations into what Blevins calls "bundles of triumphs," which lend weight to her well-observed lyrics and gravity to her soulful vocals.

    "It's about coming into womanhood, but it's more than just a coming-of-age story. It's me discovering that I'm capable of writing a song on my own. I'm capable of staying sober. I'm capable of all these things that once felt so far out of reach. Within those walls these songs had to be unapologetically honest."Or, as she puts it on the bluesy opener "Afraid," "Have you ever been afraid, with nowhere to hide? Scared of nothing, but you're running inside?" The growling guitars-played by friends and co-producers Paul Cauthen and Beau Bedford-sound like wolves at the door, as Blevins introduces the themes that drive this record: the reality that we're all afraid of something, that we're all running from it even though we'll never get away from it. She summons those fears in songs that are both plainspoken and artful, which is apt for someone who considers herself a poet first, a singer second. "Back when I was seven or eight, I was just fascinated with words. Writing was always an outlet for me. It always felt like a release and a relief, almost like going to church."Church and music were the family business, especially on her mother's side. Her grandparents, aunts, and uncles sang in a gospel group called the Harbor Masters, touring throughout Appalachia in the '70s and '80s. Once Leah and her twin sister Lacey were old enough, her Papaw taught theImbued with the grit of vintage country music and the grace of gospel, Leah Blevins' debut album is a scrapbook of sorts, a collage of feelings and memories from a decade spent working in the big city of Nashville while missing the small town she left behind.

    "It's a timestamp of my twenties," says the Sandy Hook, Kentucky, native. "Here are all the stories and all the experiences from that decade. Here are all the mixed emotions I've felt about things I've gone through and people I've met along the way." First Time Feeling turns tribulations into what Blevins calls "bundles of triumphs," which lend weight to her well-observed lyrics and gravity to her soulful vocals. "It's about coming into womanhood, but it's more than just a coming-of-age story. It's me discovering that I'm capable of writing a song on my own. I'm capable of staying sober.

    I'm capable of all these things that once felt so far out of reach. Within those walls these songs had to be unapologetically honest."Or, as she puts it on the bluesy opener "Afraid," "Have you ever been afraid, with nowhere to hide? Scared of nothing, but you're running inside?" The growling guitars-played by friends and co-producers Paul Cauthen and Beau Bedford-sound like wolves at the door, as Blevins introduces the themes that drive this record: the reality that we're all afraid of something, that we're all running from it even though we'll never get away from it.

    She summons those fears in songs that are both plainspoken and artful, which is apt for someone who considers herself a poet first, a singer second. "Back when I was seven or eight, I was just fascinated with words. Writing was always an outlet for me. It always felt like a release and a relief, almost like going to church."Church and music were the family business, especially on her mother's side. Her grandparents, aunts, and uncles sang in a gospel group called the Harbor Masters, touring throughout Appalachia in the '70s and '80s.

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Afraid
      • 2. Beautiful Disaster
      • 3. First Time Feeling
      • 4. Little Birds
      • 5. Fossil
      • 6. Magnolias
      • 7. Clutter
      • 8. Believe
      • 9. Mexican Restaurant
      • 10. Mountain

    Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Afraid
      • 2. Beautiful Disaster
      • 3. First Time Feeling
      • 4. Little Birds
      • 5. Fossil
      • 6. Magnolias
      • 7. Clutter
      • 8. Believe
      • 9. Mexican Restaurant
      • 10. Mountain